I had not planned to write about the Super Bowl or its entertainment, but after seeing and hearing it, Im going to do it; so forgive me a small, but intermediate, critique of the lousy state of modern music and culture.

We were getting ready to go to our next-door neighbors house to watch the Super Bowl, and we had our radio tuned to the National Football League broadcast of the pre-game. So, here comes the National Anthem, sung by Christina Aguilera. First of all, I have long hated the trend of singers nowadays to do these wild vocal gymnastics that take the notes of a song up and down and all around. It makes me cringe and quickly switch the station. This singer is one who does the vocal gymnastics.

When we heard the anthem begin, we stopped where we were on our front porch, put our hand over our heart and faced the flag. Right off the bat, she starts in with the note-mangling, roller coaster vocalization, and I cant stand to hear the Star Spangled Banner sung in such an outrageous way. Why cant these kids nowadays sing a straight, respectful, traditional rendition of our National Anthem?

Then, it got worse. She mangled the lyric. My husband and I quickly glanced, wide-eyed at each other with a Did you hear that?! expression. Yes, we did hear that, and so did the rest of America.

 [Christina Aguilera], 30, who has sung the National Anthem at many previous sporting events, including Game 7 of last year's NBA finals, bungled the lyrics, causing confusion amongst the crowd and with viewers at home.

What so proudly we watched at the twilight's last reaming, she belted about one minute into the song, to the bewilderment of somber Super Bowl fans.

What should have come next: O'er the ramparts we watch'd, were so gallantly streaming.

Ms. Aguilera reportedly explained her lapse as, I lost my place. She was, after all, live in front of a giant stadium full of people, with millions more watching on television and listening on radio. Its understandable that you might be a bit nervous, but this was not some high school kid in his first public performance; this was a professional performer with years of public singing experience.

I dont know about you, but the Star Spangled Banner has been ingrained in my mind and heart from a very early age. I can sing it and not miss a word. Ms. Aguilera is only 30 years old. Could it be that schools are not teaching the kids the Star Spangled Banner like they used to? That songs lyic should be second-nature, and the song should be sung in a respectful manner, not with the wailing and contorting of the notes of the song. Its our National Anthem, after allnot some pop tarts record!

It got even worse at halftime. Ive heard of the Black Eyed Peas, but not having a televsion and not listening to the type of radio stations that might play their music, I was not familiar with their sound. If thats what passes for music nowadays, there is no more music. Thats what our kids are feeding on. It sounded like noises from hellI mean that literally! If the forces of hell were putting on a halftime show, theres the music.

I realize that every generation of Americans has bemoaned the music of the younger generation, and there is a reason for it. Its because our society devolves; it doesnt evolve. As we have moved through time, even though knowledge and technology have increased, there has been a steady process of degeneration in our culture and morality and the minds and hearts of the people.

Part of that is certainly the dumbed-down public school curriculum. Despite being given billions of dollars of taxpayer money year after year, the schools are no longer providing a quality education to students. Instead, the schools churn out kids who cant even write a legible paragraph and who do not know the correct history of our nation and world. Since God was removed from the public schools in the 1960s, the degeneration has been progressing more each year, and we are now left with the results of a watery education with no moral foundationa nation overrun with people who have never gained even the most basic knowledge of Gods truth and why it matters.

Its also true that music has devolved. What passes for music, as illustrated by the horrible halftime show, is nothing more than a barbaric beat with the harsh chanting of words that appeal to the basest instincts of those who fill their ears and hearts with that garbage. Hip hop or rap, or whatever you want to call it, is not music; its poison for the soul. And, its quite disturbing that so many young people are hooked on that poison.

Ive heard some of this noise in passing here and there, from cars whose owners cynically and rudely blast the evil racket, forcing all nearby to hear. While scanning the radio dial, Ive heard the foul and wicked lyrics, full of mindless sex and violence. Can anyone understand the influence and power of those sounds on the minds and hearts of our younger generations? Is anyone paying attention to the increasingly violent and horribly promiscuous behavior of kids nowadays? Is anyone associating the two?

Yes, people have always acted up, and done bad things, but it would only be an oblivious person who would not be able to see the steady degradation of the minds and morals of each new generation of Americans. This is by design. Not only is solid morality cast aside, but in its place is the fallacious mindset of relativism which says that the definition of right and wrong depends on each mans opinion and perception. This warped thinking is pounded home throughout the entertainment world, as well as the public school systems.

The influence of socialistic indoctrination in the public schools has also been molding people to be more amenable to looking to an all-powerful government for their sustenance. It is stripping away individual initiative and creativity and personal responsibility. In short, its creating a nation of dumb sheep. As Michael Savage might say, here is the world through a Super Bowl halftime show.

Ironically, as I cringed at the sound of the Black Eyed Peas, other critics complained that their performance was lackluster and boring! Its amazing that two people can look at the same object and see entirely different things.

Which brings me to the bit that political pundits with nothing better to discuss may natter on about come Monday morning: will.i.ams lyrical change-up for the first verse of Where Is the Love?: In America we need to get things straight / Obama, lets get these kids educated / Create jobs so the country stays stimulated.

Oh, the irony! The kids are educated exactly as planned. The fact that groups like the Black Eyed Peas achieve such huge success is a testament to the kind of public school education our kids are receiving, and its not good.

So, what good does all my lamenting do? Probably not much, but Im saying things that I am certain many people believe about our popular culture. Its rotten to the core. If we ever hope to change the rot, we have to first address it and acknowledge it. Define it, then defeat it. How? We have to offer something true and good in its place, and that is a mighty tall ordernot just offering a replacement for the moral rottenness in entertainment, but finding an audience to receive it. Not many people in our world have a taste for the truth. It comes down to changing the hearts of the people, and that is a difficult, if not impossible, thing to do at this point in our world where so many have firmly rejected the truth.

Until or if we figure out how to reclaim our culture, can we at least feature singers who will render our National Anthem in the classic and honorable styling, and return the talented marching bands to the field for halftime shows?

I had a house full of ten and eleven year old girls plus some teens.... they all said the half time performance was horrible. In fact, they listened for a few minutes and went into the kitchen to do other things. I think young and old thought the performance by the Black Eyed Peas was less than say... great. Just a thought.

Its because our society devolves; it doesnt evolve. As we have moved through time, even though knowledge and technology have increased, there has been a steady process of degeneration in our culture and morality and the minds and hearts of the people.

Absolutely. I call it de-evolution. It's real. I would add that the behavior of the PLAYERS also illustrated this fact. They celebrate wildly after every little thing, in a way that would have been considered unsportsmanlike not too long ago.

I watched two football games this year and both games featured players getting penalties for unsportsmanlike celebration in the end zone. But it happens on almost every play.

What we see and hear is part of the process of us being overrun by a kind of non-violent coup. My instincts have been telling me this since the late ‘90’s but then it was slowed by the Bush years and now it’s just making up for lost time.

Could it be that schools are not teaching the kids the Star Spangled Banner like they used to?

Surely you jest..
No Star Spangled Banner
No Pledge of Allegiance
Few if any American Flags except out front
Better not wear an American flag pin or an American flag patch anywhere.
The government schools are nightmares of socialist indocrination.

“Super Bowl Entertainment Showcases Degenerate State of American Culture”

America has been degenerate for decades and only getting worse. You can’t even watch sports events anymore because of the incessant commercials with nearly nude women and repeated alcohol advertisements.

Ghetto culture has been driving out good culture for longer than I’ve been alive. While there are exceptions, overall the influx of negro culture has been bad for our society in terms of dress, dancing, music, art, speech, humor, and manners.

15
posted on 02/08/2011 5:02:03 AM PST
by ClearCase_guy
(BO + MB = BOMB -- The One will make sure they get one.)

Whoever planned the halftime show, most likely a committee, new exactly what they were getting. The BEP’s are basically a manufactured pop-group that sings karaoke. There are no instruments in their songs, there are only synthetically manufactured noises that are supposed to come close to some kind of real musical instrument, but they always fail. BEPs music has no soul and the “players” are people who were assembled like a boy-band—with the requisite “Mod Squad” look, but without the white male.

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